mirror of https://git.tuxpa.in/a/code-server.git
159 lines
6.1 KiB
Markdown
159 lines
6.1 KiB
Markdown
<!-- START doctoc generated TOC please keep comment here to allow auto update -->
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# Maintaining
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- [Workflow](#workflow)
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- [Milestones](#milestones)
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- [Triage](#triage)
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- [Project boards](#project-boards)
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- [Versioning](#versioning)
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- [Pull requests](#pull-requests)
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- [Merge strategies](#merge-strategies)
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- [Changelog](#changelog)
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- [Releases](#releases)
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- [Publishing a release](#publishing-a-release)
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Current maintainers:
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- @code-asher
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- @oxy
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- @jsjoeio
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This document is meant to serve current and future maintainers of code-server,
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as well as share our workflow for maintaining the project.
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## Workflow
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The workflow used by code-server maintainers aims to be easy to understood by
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the community and easy enough for new maintainers to jump in and start
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contributing on day one.
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### Milestones
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We operate mainly using
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[milestones](https://github.com/cdr/code-server/milestones). This was heavily
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inspired by our friends over at [vscode](https://github.com/microsoft/vscode).
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Here are the milestones we use and how we use them:
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- "Backlog" -> Work not yet planned for a specific release.
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- "On Deck" -> Work under consideration for upcoming milestones.
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- "Backlog Candidates" -> Work that is not yet accepted for the backlog. We wait
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for the community to weigh in.
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- "<0.0.0>" -> Work to be done for a specific version.
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With this flow, any un-assigned issues are essentially in triage state. Once
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triaged, issues are either "Backlog" or "Backlog Candidates". They will
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eventually move to "On Deck" (or be closed). Lastly, they will end up on a
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version milestone where they will be worked on.
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### Triage
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We use the following process for triaging GitHub issues:
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1. Create an issue
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1. Add appropriate labels to the issue (including "needs-investigation" if we
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should look into it further)
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1. Add the issue to a milestone
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1. If it should be fixed soon, add to version milestone or "On Deck"
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2. If not urgent, add to "Backlog"
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3. Otherwise, add to "Backlog Candidate" for future consideration
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### Project boards
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We use project boards for projects or goals that span multiple milestones.
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Think of this as a place to put miscellaneous things (like testing, clean up
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stuff, etc). As a maintainer, random tasks may come up here and there. The
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project boards give you places to add temporary notes before opening a new
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issue. Given that our release milestones function off of issues, we believe
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tasks should have dedicated issues.
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Project boards also give us a way to separate the issue triage from
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bigger-picture, long-term work.
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## Versioning
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`<major.minor.patch>`
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The code-server project follows traditional [semantic
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versioning](https://semver.org/), with the objective of minimizing major changes
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that break backward compatibility. We increment the patch level for all
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releases, except when the upstream Visual Studio Code project increments its
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minor version or we change the plugin API in a backward-compatible manner. In
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those cases, we increment the minor version rather than the patch level.
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## Pull requests
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Ideally, every PR should fix an issue. If it doesn't, make sure it's associated
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with a version milestone.
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If a PR does fix an issue, don't add it to the version milestone. Otherwise, the
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version milestone will have duplicate information: the issue and the PR fixing
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the issue.
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### Merge strategies
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For most things, we recommend the **squash and merge** strategy. If you're
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updating `lib/vscode`, we suggest using the **rebase and merge** strategy. There
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may be times where **creating a merge commit** makes sense as well. Use your
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best judgment. If you're unsure, you can always discuss in the PR with the team.
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### Changelog
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To save time when creating a new release for code-server, we keep a running
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changelog at `CHANGELOG.md`.
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If either the author or reviewer of a PR believes the change should be mentioned
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in the changelog, then it should be added.
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If there is not a **Next Version** when you modify `CHANGELOG.md`, please add it
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using the template you see near the top of the changelog.
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When writing your changelog item, ask yourself:
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1. How do these changes affect code-server users?
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2. What actions do they need to take (if any)?
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If you need inspiration, we suggest looking at the [Emacs
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changelog](https://github.com/emacs-mirror/emacs/blob/master/etc/NEWS).
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## Releases
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With each release, we rotate the role of release manager to ensure every
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maintainer goes through the process. This helps us keep documentation up-to-date
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and encourages us to continually review and improve the flow.
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If you're the current release manager, follow these steps:
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1. Create a [release issue](../.github/ISSUE_TEMPLATE/release.md)
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1. Fill out checklist
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1. Publish the release
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1. After release is published, close release milestone
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### Publishing a release
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1. Run `yarn release:prep` and type in the new version (e.g., `3.8.1`)
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1. GitHub Actions will generate the `npm-package`, `release-packages` and
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`release-images` artifacts. You do not have to wait for this step to complete
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before proceeding.
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1. Run `yarn release:github-draft` to create a GitHub draft release from the
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template with the updated version.
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1. Summarize the major changes in the release notes and link to the relevant
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issues.
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1. Change the @ to target the version branch. Example: `v3.9.0 @ Target: v3.9.0`
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1. Wait for the `npm-package`, `release-packages` and `release-images` artifacts
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to build.
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1. Run `yarn release:github-assets` to download the `release-packages` artifact.
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They will upload them to the draft release.
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1. Run some basic sanity tests on one of the released packages (pay special
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attention to making sure the terminal works).
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1. Publish the release and merge the PR. CI will automatically grab the
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artifacts, publish the NPM package from `npm-package`, and publish the Docker
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Hub image from `release-images`.
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1. Update the AUR package. Instructions for updating the AUR package are at
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[cdr/code-server-aur](https://github.com/cdr/code-server-aur).
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1. Wait for the npm package to be published.
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